♪alt13
Well-Known Member
Yes I did. You're just dodging my accusation that you don't know the historical context that I am speaking to. I can't fit 40 years of the history of Egyptian/Israeli/US relations here, but I can tell you this(again)the US brought a carrot not a stick. If the US wants a stable, peaceful, syria without WMDs we will get it by working with Assad. There is a lot we could offer him and the people of Syria(lifting of sanctions to start) but we don't even have an embassy there and we refuse to sit down with them. We have been encouraging the destabilization of syria for 2 years now.Again, bro, you did not lay down a clear path on what you want to do. If you can't figure out what a simple lay out is, how can anyone take your accusations of backdoor deals seriously? "Look at how the US dealt with a problem". You didn't say lets do that, you didn't outline how we'd do that. You just threw some words together and were glad it made a sentence the might reflect your opinion.
If you think Assad is a bad guy I want you to try and imagine a syria with these guys in charge.
[removed by moderator]...and a piece of how you have chosen to tie this all in with your league of masterminds. [/QUOTE]
Putting words in my mouth again. U.S. officials have a bias for or against intervention depending on whether or not there is a "national interest".(financial) I do not see them as "masterminds". I disagree with them because I think what they are doing is fool hardy that doesn't make me a nut case.
I do not desire a conflict.
They will fall short by at least 2 minutes and you know it. So don't hedge your position this way.In the event Syria falls short by even one minute, we should make sure they regret it.
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